Sizing the power supply for a RTX 5080 is one spec South African builders should not guess. Get the capacity right and the card runs quiet and stable for years; get it wrong and transient spikes trip protection mid-game. The honest answer is a specific wattage class plus an ATX 3.1 design.

Quick Answer

A RTX 5080 (16GB) wants a 850W ATX 3.1 unit, with 750W the practical floor for a single-card build. That covers the card's draw plus a mainstream CPU with headroom for the brief power spikes modern GPUs produce.

Why 850W Is the Target for a RTX 5080

A RTX 5080 can pull from roughly 120W at idle-to-light loads up to around 360W under a heavy gaming or rendering load, and it spikes briefly above that. Add a modern 8 to 16 core CPU at 65W to 170W and the storage, fans and board, and a 850W 80 PLUS Gold or better unit keeps you near the efficient 50 to 70 percent load band. That is where the supply runs coolest and quietest.

ATX 3.1 matters more than raw wattage at this level. Its native 12V-2x6 connector and tighter transient handling mean the RTX 5080's millisecond spikes never trip the unit's protection. Pairing a 850W ATX 3.1 supply with the card removes the most common cause of mid-session shutdowns.

Capacity First, Then Quality

Pick the 850W capacity first, then prioritise an 80 PLUS Gold or Platinum rating, a 10 year warranty and a fully-modular design. A reputable 850W Gold unit beats a no-name higher-wattage supply on rail stability and protection every time. The RTX 5080 itself runs roughly R26,000 to R32,000, so the PSU is a small but critical slice of the total.

FAQ

How many watts does the RTX 5080 need?

Plan for 850W, with 750W the absolute floor for a single card. Sizing above the average draw covers the transient spikes that are the real reason GPUs need headroom.

Do I need an ATX 3.1 PSU for the RTX 5080?

Yes. ATX 3.1 units handle the brief power excursions a RTX 5080 produces and use a native 12V-2x6 connector, so there is no adapter clutter. It is the safer choice for a long-term build.

Is a higher-wattage no-name unit a good saving?

No. A quality 850W Gold unit beats a cheaper higher-wattage supply on ripple, rail stability and protection. Buy capacity and quality together rather than chasing the biggest number.

Match a quality 850W ATX 3.1 unit to your RTX 5080, currently stocked at Evetech, and size it for 50 to 70 percent load for the quietest, most stable result.